And one-tenth to theodore



, May 6, 1924. 1,492,907

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W. B. TRACY TICKET DELIVERY APPARATUS I cut persons each using his own key can the tomatically locked Patented May 6,1924.

, ,UNITEDJVVSVJTVATES ATENT: oi-"rlcsj WALTER B. 'rnacnor mrms'rnnnnssnn, ASSIGNOR or onn-rounrn'ro THOMAS .1. FOX, or mmnrs, rnnnnssnn, AND ONE-TENTH T :rnnononn r. TRACY, or

$1. Louis, mssounr.

TICKET-DELIVERY APPARATUS.

] Application filed April 5, 1919. Serial no. 287,907.

To all whom, it may concern:

Be it known that I, WALTER B. TRACY, a citizen of the'United States, and resident of Memphis, in thecounty of Shelby and State of Tennessee, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Ticket-De livery Apparatus, of whichthe following is a specification, reference being had therein to the accompanying drawing.

In ticket delivery machines it is desirable to have compact devices from which differ withdraw tickets the value of which shall be added to a total on a register corresponding'to andoperatedonl t rough the use of that. particular ke an which devices shall further register t e grand total of values sold as well as the entire number of tickets sold. It is further desirable to have duplicatesets of devices that can be removably arranged in pigeonhole-like order, tohave evices secure against unauthorized withdrawal of tickets and that will be auainst operating move ment when the last tlcket is withdrawn.

With these. general ideas in mind, I use the.devices illustrated in the accompanying drawings, inwhioh, Figure 1 is a front viewof a portion, of abank or cabinet of registering devices in the relative positions of the common sets of pi eonholes. t igure' 2 is a side elevation of the machine, a casing'being omitted.

Figure3 is a plan view of the same de-.

vices. M I Figure 4 is a front view with parts broken awa F1gure'5 is a side elevation partly in section showing the devices seen in Figure 4. Figure 6 is a sectional elevation showing the arrangement of the individual registers, the delivery device and one end of the ticket ma zine. I

igure 7 is aview similar to the lower part of Figure 6 showing locking devices and a ticket being delivered. Figure 8 is a rspective view of a portion of the trou'g -like ticket magazine. Figure 9 is a vertical sectional elevation showing registers scale showing the the base.

means for operatingthe individual Figure 10 is a section on the line 1010, Fi re 4.

igure 11 is a similar view on a larger devices with a key inserted.

Figures 12 and 13 are detail views illustrating means normally locking the delivery closure.

Figure 14 is a perspective view of one of the keys which acts by mere insertion without rotation.

Figure 15 is a fragmentary section of lar e wheel showing grand totals.

igure 16 is a perspective view of the same portion.

Figure 17 is a view looking toward the grand total wheel from the delivery side or end of the machine and showing a monthly total number register of ticketssold.

. In these views, 20 represents a suitable base, which may bear a removable card 20 design-atinga railway station, 21 a light casing for the working parts, and 22, 23 upright portions of a frame rigidly secured to In the base is a straight channel or way for a thin metal, ticket magazine 2a which when filled slides into place and is locked against retraction in any convenient way. In this magazine are placed many closely packed inclined tickets 25 (Figure 2) which are pressed forward against inclined lips 26 of the magazine by a block 27 having a correspondingly inclined face to rest againstthe rear of. the mam of tickets, and urged forward b a coiled spring 28 mounted on the mid le frame member 23 and having a lo arm 29 which presses a most ticket, and provided with a door or closure 33- (Figures 6, 7) which, as will a pear, is locked except when a ticket is to withdrawn. Above this delivery segment are removably mounted one above another six small individual registers 36 having projections 37 of dovetail form which slide into corresponding ways in a tubular frame 38 which is cut away at 39 to expose a registry number at the front of the machine, as seen at the left in Figure 4. These registers have in themselves no novelty.

Alongsidethis vertical set of registers and in the same or a rigidly connected frame are mounted three locks each having a bolt 40 which is normally held projecting into an aperture in the frame 38 by a spring 41 and which has in its side two key-ways 42 for wedge pointed keys 43 (Figures 11 and 14) which, as either is shoved into the look through projecting keyways 44:, enter the ways 42 and force the bolt to the left, disengage it from the frame and engage it with a vertical bar 45. Vhen pushed home, any key 43 engages a vertically sliding'block 46. The lock being now disengaged from the frame 38 and engaged, by its bolt 40, with the vertically sliding bar 45 may itself slide bodily downward, the casing being cutaway at 47 (Figure 4) to permit this movement. Each block l6 has a projection 48 pivotally connected by a link 49 to one end of a centrally pivoted lever 50 which engages an operating crank-like arm 51 of the corresponding register 36.

Each key l3 passes through a notch in one, two, three, etc., fixed plates 52, 53, &c., in its path, and each key has one, two or more notches 54 in its edge so placed that when the key is fully home the plate or plates lie in the corresponding notch or notches so that the key does not hinder the sliding of the lock if the proper key is used, although none of the other keys will thus free this look. The use of this expedient does not, of course, bar the use of additional means for preventing the use of wrong keys.

Each lock, then, actuates only its own individual registering device, but every lock when moved down slides with it the bar 45. This bar at its lower end carries a lug 56 which is pivotally connected by a link 57 to an arm 58 of the shaft 32 (Figure 7) whereby, the door being unlocked, each descent of any lock rocks the segment 31, opens the door 33 and slides outward one ticket. The opening of the door when no lock is released is prevented by a lug 59 carried by the bar 45 and lying int-he path of the segment 31, except when carried be low that path by the descent of said bar (Figures 12, 13).

The grand total value register is a large wheel 60 mounted in a frame that slides into a way on the base and is removably secured therein by a spring pawl 61. The wheel has one hundred and fifty-one marginal notches 62 and is turned one notch on the return of the bar 45 after each descent by means of a spring pawl 63 carried attlie end of a centrally pivoted bar 64, one opposite end of which is connectedby a link 65 with the bar 4:5. The wheel carries a printed band 66 bearing marginal numbers at 67 corre spending with the several notches and 0pposite the first number 1 bears the value of a ticket for the station indicated on all the tickets in the mass 25, and double this value opposite 2, and so on, so that if at the outset a blank space 68 is shown at a window 69, (Figure 17 the withdrawal of the first ticket by operating any lock causes the number 1 and the value of one ticket to appear at this window.

Vhen the tickets are exhausted, the last step of the wheel allows a pawl 7 0 to fall into a notch 71. preventing the wheels further rotation. This pawl can be disengaged by a rod 72 running to the rear of the machine and terminating inside a locked cabinet enclosing the entire set of devices.

The cabinet being opened, the wheel can be, and magazine is, withdrawn, the latter is again filled with tickets and replaced. The wheel, if withdrawn, is also returned, but with the blank 68 at the window 69. The band 66 is changed only when rates are changed, or ;the machine is to be used for a different station. I prefer to carry the flanges 26 across the lower part of the magazine leaving an opening 26 (Figure 8) which. will allow but one ticket to pass at a time.

The machine also includes a monthly total register 73 of the number of tickets sold, this register being without novelty, and operated by an extension of the bar 64 pivotally connected by a link 74 to the arm 75 of the register 73. This register is of the common type in which resetting at zero is accomplished at will by a thumb nut 76. In order that the spring arm 29 (Figure 9.) may when desired be held up while the magazine is changed, a rotary rod 77 is provided, and when this is rotated an arm 78 swings down into position to bar the forward swinging of the spring arm.

If desired, as will often be thecase, at the close of each days business, the amount registered at the window 69 may be noted and the wheel may then be rotated, in the direction allowed by the spring pawl 63, until the blank 68 appears at the window, this rotation not affecting any other'parts.

This rotation of the wheel may be through contact of the fingers with its rear side, or resetting means like that used on the register 7 3.

I also prefer to add to this security by the use of a member 80 (Figure 6) which is normally held against swinging down upon the tickets by the rocking member 31 but which swings down against the second ticket as soon as the first is partly withdrawn and by its eccentric grip holds-the second ticket until 31 on its return releases it by rocking 8O upward.

Practically, each apparatus is complete in lit) ' evices operable b itself, and its dimensions are little greater than those used in the drawings, so that a great number of such units may bebrought together in a very small space, or a space hardly longer than that occupied by a correspondingI set of ordinary pigeonholes.

What claim is: a 1. The combination with a suitable casing base from which rises a frame provided with pigeonholes each forwardly closed and bearin the name of a specific station, all the pigeon oles containing similar delivering inserting at different points suitable un ike keys and also containing individual re 'stering devices each operable only throug the use of .the corresponding e and a totalling register necessarily actuated when any key 0 erates its individual register of'any pigeon ole.

2. The combination with a ticket magazine adapted to support on edge a mass of closel adjacent tickets, of means for sliding t e tickets singly out of the magazine, means for automatically registering the number and value of tickets so Withdrawn,

.a wheel arranged to be rotated step by step through equal small angles as tickets are withdrawn in succession, and automatic means for locking the wheel and'preventing operation of the apparatus after the completion of a predetermined number of steps.

p 3. The combination with a ticket sellers cabinet containing as many ticket-magazine receiving pigeonholes as there are kinds of tickets to be sold, of corresponding magazines for containing duplicate tickets, respectively, each ma azine having a set of unlike locks identiczfily similar to the locks of every other magazine, a register for each magazine corresponding to the different kinds of locks in the sets, and means whereby the use of a proper key in any of the like locks may actuate the corresponding register.

4 The combination with closely adjacent ticket magazines equal in number to the use of the key of a lock of that particular kind.

5. The combination with closely adjacent ticket magazines equal in number to the kinds of tickets to be sold and each provided with different clerks locks each of which is identical with a lock of every other magazine, a register for each magazine and Y for each kind of clerks locks and operable only through the use of the key of a lock of that kind, and a total register operatively connected with each of the registers first mentioned. 1

6. The combination with a forwardly closed frame adapted for insertion in a pigeonhole, of a ticket magazine in said frame and containing a file of closely adjacent tickets on edge, a series of normally locked individual ticket registers mounted in the frame, a series of locks having unlike keys and operably connected with said registers, respectively, a totalling register mounted in the frame and actuated by every registration of the individual registers, and means whereby in the act of registering the foremost ticket of said file is always ejected from the apparatus.

In testimony whereof I hereunto aflix my signature.

WALTER B. TRACY. 

